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September 1, 2002
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
On September 27, the banks of the Guadalupe River at
Kerrville’s Louise Hays Park will be the setting as Texas
storytellers from all across the state will participate in the
annual Hill Country community educational event, Texas Heritage
Living History Day.
Now in its seventh year, Texas Heritage Living History
Day will gather more than two thousand students, teachers and others
from the Central Texas area to listen to the stories of noted
storytellers, poets, humorists and Texas historians.
Among
the more than fifty performers to be featured at Living History Day
will be members of the 2001-2002 Texas Commission of the Arts
Touring Artist Roster. They are:
Tim
Tingle, a member of the
Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma and a highly regarded Native American
storyteller. A veteran performer at the Texas Folklife Festival and
at Six Flags Over Texas, Tingle focuses on ghost stories of Texas,
Choctaw tribal lore, and Trickster tales. In October of 2001, the
Woodcraft Circle of Native American Writers and Storytellers
selected him as “Contemporary Storyteller of the Year.”
With
over thirty years of public school and university teaching
experience, Doc Moore is an award-winning teller of history,
folk, ghost and inspirational stories. Moore, who hails from Canyon
Lake, has been a popular draw at Six Flags Over Texas for the last
ten years and is a founding member of Hill Country Storytellers.
His costumed characters range from the rodeo circuit rider to the
medicine show pitchman.
For
more than a decade, Anne McCrady has been both a storyteller
and story-dancer of East Texas tales and poetry. A featured teller
at the Rusk County Heritage Syrup Festival, the Squatty Pines
Storytelling Festival, and the Texas Storytelling Festival, Ms.
McCrady will sometimes incorporate ethnic percussion instruments or
just a simple guitar in both traditional and original stories. A
member of the TCA Touring Artist Roster and an avid supporter of
education and students, Anne’s award-winning poems have been
published both online and in print journals and anthologies.
A
teller of tales since childhood, Allen Wayne Damron has been
a mainstay at the Kerrville Folk Festival for more than 25 years. A
noted actor, hunting guide, tracker, World Class Rifle shot and
Texas historian, Damron has been labeled a "Texas Legend". A
resident of Terlingua, Damron has released more than 16 audio tapes
and CD's of his stories and Cowboy poetry and has ten major film
roles to his credit, including 1987's "Alamo, The Price of Freedom."
With a
BA in zoology from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio, Lucas Miller
would seem to be the odd man out at an event such as Texas Heritage
Living History Day. However, as a member of the TCA's Roster of
Touring Artists, there is a lot more than meets the eye. Miller was
named in 2001 as "Best New Artist for Older Children" in the 2001
Children's Music Web Awards and his first CD, "The Anaconda La
Bamba!, won a Parents' Choice "Recommended" award in the fall of
2000. Since 1992, Miller has reached over 200,000 kids at schools,
public libraries and festivals, and is a welcome addition to this
year's Living History Day.
Bobby Bridger, great grand nephew of famous
American mountain man Jim Bridger and author of "A Ballad of the
West" will be making his first-ever appearance at Texas Heritage
Living History Day. A popular performer known to thousands of
Kerrville Folk Festival attendees, Bridger will be sharing his tales
of the mountain man and the Lakota Sioux at the event. Among the
many notable highlights in a long and successful recording and
acting career, Bridger is also the host of "The Tradition Lives On",
a history of ballads produced by textbook publisher Holt, Rinehart &
Winston as part of an experimental global electronic textbook.
Other members of the TCA Roster of Touring Artists that
will be performing at Texas Heritage Living History Day will be
Donna Ingham, who specializes in telling Texas Tales; humorist
and Cowboy poet, Dennis Gaines; and Finley Stewart,
storyteller and author of "Best Stories from the Texas Storytelling
Festival".
Over forty other performers will also be at Louise Hays
Park for Texas Heritage Living History Day. The event will begin a
9 a.m. and will last until 3 p.m. and admission will be free.
Rounding out the weekend's festivities will be the First
Annual Texas Heritage Seminar at Schreiner University on Saturday,
September 28 from 10 a.m. to Noon, featuring papers and
presentations on Texas Heritage education, as well as, a Sunday
concert to benefit Literacy and Learning and the Wayne Kennemer
Scholarship Fund. Terri Hendrix and Lloyd Maines will be performing
at 3 p.m. at the Dietert Auditorium at Schreiner University.
Tickets are on sale and are $15 each.
For more information, check out the Texas Heritage Music
Foundation website at
www.texasheritagemusic.org.
Contact: Tim Wilton or Kathleen Hudson
(830) 367-3750 e-mail:
kat@maverickbbs.com
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